The Mercury News Weekend

Rights group blames police for killings

Mexican officers said to have moved bodies after ranch executions

- By Lulu Orozco and Christophe­r Sherman

MEXICO CITY — Federal police executed at least 22 people on a ranch last year, then moved bodies and planted guns to corroborat­e the official account that the deaths happened in a gunbattle, Mexico’s human rights commission said Thursday.

One police officer was killed in the confrontat­ion in the western state of Michoacan on May 22, 2015. The government has said the dead were drug cartel suspects who were hiding out on the ranch in Tanhuato, near the border with Jalisco state.

The National Human Rights Commission said there were also two cases of torture and four more deaths caused by excessive force. It said it could not establish satisfacto­rily the circumstan­ces of 15 others who were shot to death.

“The investigat­ion confirmed facts that show grave human rights violations attributab­le to public servants of the federal police,” commission President Luis Raul Gonzalez Perez said.

Mexico’s national security commission­er, Renato Sales, who oversees the federal police, denied the accusation­s, holding his own news conference before the rights commission had finished its own.

Sales said federal police ordered the suspects to drop their weapons and surrender, but were answered with gunfire.

“The use of weapons was necessary and proportion­al against the real and imminent and unlawful aggres- sion,” Sales said. “That is to say, in our minds they acted in legitimate defense.”

The lopsided death toll had led to suspicions that officers might have arbitraril­y killed people during the operation against suspected members of the Jalisco New Generation cartel.

The rights commission questioned the government’s explanatio­n of what led to the clash in the first place. Federal police had said they encountere­d a truck and took fire from its passengers before being led to the ranch.

The commission’s report said the government did not produce evidence supporting that account and it said witness statements suggested 41 federal police had sneaked onto the ranch as early as 6 a.m. Officers started their assault at least an hour earlier than they maintained in reporting on the incident, the commission said.

 ?? REFUGIO RUIZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Mexican state police stand guard in May 2015, near the entrance of Rancho del Sol, where a shootout with authoritie­s and suspected criminals happened.
REFUGIO RUIZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Mexican state police stand guard in May 2015, near the entrance of Rancho del Sol, where a shootout with authoritie­s and suspected criminals happened.

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